Iran One of the earliest systematic censuses in world history was conducted during the early
Achaemenid period, up until the reign of
Darius The Great in
Ancient Iran. This census, aimed at
financial planning,
military organization, and
tax collection, spanned regions across three continents:
Asia,
Africa, and
Europe. It included data on population numbers, the wealth of cities and provinces (
Satrapies), precise assessments of agricultural lands, the resources of each region, and other factors critical to determining state finances and planning for governance and military operations.
Egypt The earliest Egyptian census was the
cattle count, which counted not people but livestock (especially but not exclusively cows) for taxation purposes. During the early
Old Kingdom it was taken every two years; the frequency increased over time. Human censuses in Egypt first appeared in the late
Middle Kingdom and developed in the
New Kingdom.
Herodotus wrote that
Ahmose I, first monarch of the New Kingdom, required every Egyptian to declare annually to the
nomarch, "whence he gained his living". Under the
Ptolemies and the
Romans several censuses were conducted in Egypt by government officials.
Ancient Greece There are several accounts of ancient Greek city states carrying out censuses.
Israel Censuses are mentioned several times in the
Biblical narrative. God commands a
per capita tax to be paid with the census for the upkeep of the
Tabernacle. The
Book of Numbers is named after the counting of the Israelite population according to the house of the Fathers after the exodus from Egypt. A second census was taken while the Israelites were camped in the "
plains of Moab". King
David performed a census that produced disastrous results. His son, King
Solomon, had all of the foreigners in Israel counted.
China One of the world's earliest preserved censuses was held in China in AD2 during the
Han dynasty, and is still considered by scholars to be quite accurate. The population was registered as having 57,671,400 individuals in 12,366,470 households but on this occasion only taxable families had been taken into account, indicating the income and the number of soldiers who could be mobilized. Another census was held in AD144.
India The oldest recorded census in India is thought to have occurred around 330BC during the reign of Emperor
Chandragupta Maurya under the leadership of
Chanakya and
Ashoka.
Rome depicting the
Virgin Mary and
Saint Joseph registering for the
Census of Quirinius The English term is taken directly from the
Latin census, from '''' ("to estimate"). The census played a crucial role in the administration of the Roman government, as it was used to determine the class a citizen belonged to for both military and tax purposes. Beginning in the middle republic, it was usually carried out every five years. It provided a register of citizens and their property from which their duties and privileges could be listed. It is said to have been instituted by the Roman king
Servius Tullius in the at which time the number of arms-bearing citizens was supposedly counted at around 80,000. In AD6, the Roman legate
Publius Sulpicius Quirinius organized a
census of Judaea for tax purposes, which was partially responsible for the development of the
Zealot movement and several failed rebellions against Rome ultimately ending in the
Jewish Diaspora. The
Gospel of Luke makes reference to Quirinius' census in relation to the
birth of Jesus; based on variant readings of this passage, a minority of biblical scholars, including
N. T. Wright, speculate that this passage refers to a separate registration conducted during the reign of
Herod the Great, several years before Quirinius' census. The 15-year
indiction cycle established by
Diocletian in AD297 was based on
wikt:quindecennial censuses and formed the basis for dating in late antiquity and under the
Byzantine Empire.
Rashidun and Umayyad Caliphates In the
Middle Ages, the
Caliphate began conducting regular censuses soon after its formation, beginning with the one ordered by the second
Rashidun caliph,
Umar.
Medieval Europe The
Domesday Book was undertaken in AD1086 by
William I of England so that he could properly tax the land he had recently conquered. In 1183, a census was taken of the
crusader
Kingdom of Jerusalem, to ascertain the number of men and amount of money that could possibly be raised against an invasion by
Saladin, sultan of
Egypt and
Syria. The first national census of France () was undertaken in 1328, mostly for fiscal purposes. It estimated the French population at 16 to 17 million.
Inca Empire In the 15th century, the
Inca Empire had a unique way to record census information. The Incas did not have any written language but recorded information collected during censuses and other numeric information as well as non-numeric data on
quipus, strings from
llama or
alpaca hair or cotton cords with numeric and other values encoded by knots in a
base-10 positional system.
Spanish Empire On May 25, 1577,
King Philip II of Spain ordered by royal cédula the preparation of a general description of Spain's holdings in the Indies. Instructions and a questionnaire, issued in 1577 by the Office of the Cronista Mayor, were distributed to local officials in the Viceroyalties of
New Spain and Peru to direct the gathering of information. The questionnaire, composed of fifty items, was designed to elicit basic information about the nature of the land and the life of its peoples. The replies, known as "", were written between 1579 and 1585 and were returned to the Cronista Mayor in Spain by the Council of the Indies. ==Sampling==